You are here

Features

When visiting the Livingston-Park County Public Library this week, patrons may notice that some of their favorite books now look like a crime scene. These red taped books are to signify the 37th year of Banned Books week.

Banning books across the U.S. has been happening for many years, based on books’ content such as being sexual in nature or having blasphemous language. However, in the last week in September, libraries celebrate the dissemination of information without restrictions.

Over 6,300 miles from Montana, a Livingston woman headed to Fiji over the summer to teacher eight weeks, learning what it was like to live on another side of the world.

Lindzi Printz, 20, who graduated from Park High School just a few short years ago, was looking for a way to go somewhere while she took a year off of school at Montana State University.

Printz said she had never really spent anytime outside of the country so she was looking for some new experiences. However, she said she didn’t want to travel just for the sake of traveling, she wanted to help people.

L-Town Soup awarded the Livingston-Park County Library with money to build up a tool selection and now it is back again to grant another person’s wish on Thursday.

L-Town Soup is a crowd-sourcing event where six people or represented organizations put together a presentation to show a unique project that needs extra funding in the area. Earlier this year, it was the library that received the most votes for putting together a library of tools for people to rent.

After three years of work, the Gardiner FFA twine project is finally coming to fruition thanks to two grants.

The twine project began after an area photographer alerted the club that several birds of prey, specifically ospreys had twine in their nests, posing a potential safety hazard for the animals because the twine is often composed of plastics.

There were suggestions for a twine disposal and even the FFA club in Bozeman had special twine disposal units.

Nikita Kusurgashev, from one of the most prestigious ballet programs in the world, will be teaching at the Yellowstone Ballet Company for the 2017-18 season.

Kusurgashev began attending the Bolshoi Ballet Academy in Moscow at age 10. At the time, the academy accepted only 36 students out of about 500 children who tried out, according to Yellowstone Ballet Company Artistic Director Kathleen Rakela.

Kusurgashev was one of the three boys in the program, and the only one to be a soloist.

A Livingston area woman along with others bought dozens of horses set for slaughter last fall, and now all but two have been adopted.

Michelle Donaldson, who lives right outside of Livingston, said she saw in the Flathead Beacon that many horses were being taken to kill pens where they would be eventually slaughtered and sold for meat, because their owners were no longer able to take care of them and the animals were never adopted.

Donaldson saw one Appaloosa in particular that she really wanted to save.

An African-American and a former mayor who was also a Klu Klux Klan member will be represented during this year’s Park County Cemetery Walk on Saturday.

Livingston historian Jack Luther will be playing Lewis Terwilliger. Terwilliger was a Park High School Principal for several years, a mayor for over three years and a Grand Wizard for the KKK of Montana.